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A hobbling Tom Moores, batting with a runner, launched a blitz of sixes in a whirlwind 87 that enabled Nottinghamshire to set a beleaguered Essex a near-impossible target of 441 in 131 overs.

Notts had four Essex batsmen back in the pavilion by the close as they look for a morale boosting win in Division One of the County Championship.

Moores, the 21-year-old son of head coach Peter, took a particular shine to Essex spinner Simon Harmer, who he deposited all around Chelmsford in an over that went for 27.

In all, Moores hit seven fours and seven sixes in an 80-ball knock, and was the only contributor to a last-wicket stand of 58 from 52 balls with Harry Gurney, who was not out nought from 13 balls.

With a series of pulls, straight drives, many lofted, and unorthodox shots out of the one-day repertoire, Moores followed up his maiden century at Taunton in their previous outing. He recorded his second highest first-class score despite turning his right ankle during wicketkeeping drills before the start of the third day.

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Essex had agreed at lunchtime that Moores could bat with a runner, and Jake Libby duly walked out alongside him at the fall of the seventh wicket on 143. His efforts almost doubled Notts’ score and put the game far beyond Essex’s reach.

Moores did not appear behind the stumps later with Riki Wessels taking the gloves briefly before young 2nd XI player Tom Keast arrived from Trent Bridge for his first senior appearance.

Essex’s chase got off to the worse possible start as their top-order folded again. Alastair Cook went lbw in the second over without scoring, playing back to a ball from Matt Milnes that kept low, and Varun Chopra’s middle stump was knocked out of the ground in Milnes’s next over.

To compound that, stand-in captain Tom Westley was beaten by one from Luke Fletcher that nipped back and struck off-stump.

Dan Lawrence and Ravi Bopara set about trying to save the game in the early evening, and their patient partnership reached 55 in 20 overs when Lawrence was caught and bowled by Samit Patel for 30. At that point, with nearly five overs to go, Essex sent in Jamie Porter as nightwatchman, and he saw out 19 balls without scoring. Bopara was unbeaten on 33.

Jake Libby in action for Notts (Image: Getty)

The day had not started so promising for Notts when they lost nightwatchman Milnes without addition to the overnight total.

Patel joined Libby for a steady third-wicket stand of 48 in 12 overs before he pushed forward to Coles and sent Adam Wheater tumbling to his right to take the catch low down. Ross Taylor, centurion in the first innings, lasted just seven balls second time around for four before he got a bottom edge to Coles as he tried to cut and was bowled as Notts lost to wickets in 15 balls.

A third was not long coming. Libby had been stuck on 49 as the wickets fell, but finally moved on to his fifty from 88 balls. But he perished on 51 as Wagner found some exaggerated movement off the pitch. Switching around the wicket, the New Zealand pace bowler slanted one in to remove leg-stump.

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Wagner added his second straight after lunch when he got one to climb and take the edge of Wessels’s bat. Billy Root had just reverse-swept Harmer for four to reach 29 when he popped the next ball into Cook’s hands at third slip.

Luke Fletcher’s 45-ball 18 ended when he backed up too far and Coles deflected a straight drive from Moores on to the stumps. Matt Carter followed when he swished outside off-stump at Quinn and Chopra, the lone slip, took the catch. After that it was the Tom Moores show.

“It’s all about youngsters taking their opportunity,” said assistant coach Paul Franks. “We knew that with a lot of the senior players moving on from last year it was time for a number of them to be given their opportunity.

“We didn’t know when it was to come, or guarantee that it was going to happen at any given time, so I suppose the challenge for them is to take their opportunity when it comes along.

“Today we’ve seen two of them take a step forward and we’re delighted with that.

“Tom has twisted his ankle, we’re not quite sure how serious it is yet but you could see he was in quite a lot of discomfort, he wasn’t his normal self – he couldn’t run between the wickets and is in quite a lot of pain at the moment but these things can settle down overnight.

“He’s a young man and James Pipe (the Club Physiotherapist) will get to work on him and we’ll see where we are with him in the morning.”